THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 97 



brown scales on the median line of the venter on most of the segments, 

 but on the ultimate segment the tuft is yellow. These scales are clavate, 

 and not denticulate. A few white scales appear in connection with the 

 lateral (yellow) stripes and the dorsal basal white band on the ultimate 

 segment is largely of white scales. The claspers are large and there is a 

 fan-shaped tuft of long yellow spatulate scales just beside them on the 

 ventral side. 



Legs all mottled; coxte and trochanters testaceous with white and 

 brown scales, femora irregularly spotted with brown and white scales, a 

 few yellow ones also occur; tibi^ much lighter, and mostly yellow scaled, 

 a few brown scales in small bunches giving the mottled look; tarsal joints 

 mostly yellow scaled, on the hind legs there are tiny basal brown spots; 

 in the fore and mid legs the brown scales are somewhat lighter and have 

 no definite arrangement, but the last tarsal on the fore legs are mostly 

 covered with these lighter brown scales. Ungues slightly unequal, both 

 uniserrate, hind ungues equal and simple. 



Wings very light and delicate and of slightly yellowish cast, covered 

 with broad yellow and brown median and lateral scales, suggesting 

 Taeniorhynchus scales; the ventral scales are, however, slender. The 

 wing is apparently partly denuded, but the apex is light, and there is a 

 well-marked yellow costal spot near the junction of sub-costa and ex- 

 tending on the wing field to the 3rd longitudinal in the vicinity of the 

 cross-veins; there is a smaller yellow spot on the costa interior to this, 

 and the costa is light continuously from the base of the wing nearly one 

 third its length; the fork cells are small, nearly as small as those of 

 Uranotaenia, and the costa has spinous scales as in that genus; ist 

 submarginal is a little longer and a little narrower than 2nd posterior. 

 Mid and supernumerary cross-veins meet and are about equal in length, 

 posterior cross-vein is about same length as the others and distant from 

 the mid nearly twice its own length, interior. Basal cell is very long. 

 Halteres light, knob mostly yellow scaled. 



Length, 5.5 mm. 



Habitat.— Camp Stotzenberg, Angeles Fampanga, Luzon, P. L 

 Taken Sept. 



Described from one very perfect specimen sent by ist Lt. Eugene 

 R. Whilmore, Asst. Sug. U.S.A., with the legend^ "Caught in the woods 

 and banana trees." 



